This Museum Was Designed for 25,000 Birds, Not Humans

Nestled within the lush landscape of Yunlu Wetland Park in China’s Pearl River Delta, Studio Link-Arc’s latest project redefines what it means to design for wildlife. The Shunde Yunlu Wetland Museum sits quietly behind a row of cedar trees, deliberately concealing itself from view. This isn’t a building seeking attention. It’s architecture that understands its place in an ecosystem where 25,000 egrets take center stage.

The design challenges conventional architectural thinking. Where most museums position themselves as cultural landmarks, this one retreats. The New York-based firm conceived the structure as four concrete tubes stacked vertically, each rotated to frame a different layer of the forest. The first floor gazes at tree roots. The second captures trunks. The third finds the crowns. The fourth reaches the treetops. Each level acts as a rotating lens, offering visitors perspectives that mirror the egrets’ own experience of their habitat.

Designer: Studio Link-Arc

This rotation creates something beyond visual interest. The cantilevered volumes give the building a sense of kinetic energy, as though the structure itself is adjusting to follow the birds’ movements across the water. The stepped form settles into the wetland’s natural density, absorbed by tall vegetation and reflective water surfaces that blur the boundary between built and natural environments. Each tube functions as a box structure, with sidewalls, roofs, and floors working together to support these dramatic projections.

Inside, a triangular atrium slices through all four floors, connecting the scattered perspectives into a single spatial experience. Sunlight filters through high skylights, softened by deep concrete beams before reaching the interior. Standing in this vertical space, visitors can simultaneously look through multiple tubes, each framing a different view of the wetland. The traditional hierarchy of architectural viewpoints dissolves into something more democratic, more aligned with the rhythms of the landscape itself.

The roof carries a lotus pond, adding another water layer to the composition. This gesture proves essential when viewing the building from paths and bridges throughout the park. The rooftop water merges visually with the wetland below, reducing the structure’s vertical impact and allowing it to read as part of the continuous water system rather than an interruption.

The project emerges from decades of conservation efforts. A local resident known as Uncle Bird spent years transforming this site into an urban sanctuary for egrets. The Shunde government later expanded the protected area thirteenfold, partnering with scientists and designers to restore water systems and bamboo forests. Studio Link-Arc’s museum completes this vision, offering a space where human visitors can observe and learn while remaining secondary to the site’s true inhabitants. The building asks a question rarely posed in contemporary architecture: What happens when we design for the birds first?

The post This Museum Was Designed for 25,000 Birds, Not Humans first appeared on Yanko Design.

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